Major liabilities: Mortgage on Brooklyn home, $500,001-$1,000,000; three home improvement loans, $45,003-$150,000.

Gifts: None.

Narrative: Velazquez' office said Monday the form was filled out with the wrong value for the Brooklyn home, listed on the paperwork as worth $1,000 to $15,000. That is actually the rental income from the home, said spokeswoman Kate Davis. Velazquez took a trip to California last November, paid for by the National Association of Government Guaranteed Lenders.

Narrative: Hefley exchanged his interest in the Colorado Springs apartment complexes for a vacation property on Edisto Island, S.C. Hefley's wife, Lynn, earned a salary for her work as a Colorado State Representative.

Narrative: Mollahan's wife also has a half interest in the Bald Head Island real estate partnership, a 25 percent interest in Remington Inc., and a one-third ownership in the West Virginia real estate partnership. She is employed by the Remington.

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Rep. Don Young, R-Alaska, chairman of the House Transportation and Infrastructure Committee.

Earned income: $150,000.

Honoraria, all donated to charity: None.

Major assets: Growth and income mutual fund, $100,001-$250,000; three individual retirement accounts, $66,003-$165,000; life insurance, $50,001-$100,000.

Major liabilities: Mortgage on rental property in Fairbanks, Alaska, $15,001-$50,000.

Gifts: None.

Narrative: Young took four trips paid for by special interests. In the winter, the Association of American Railroads and the Maritime Trades Department of the AFL-CIO each paid for a trip to Miami. Winn-Dixie Corp. paid for an April trip to Jacksonville, Fla., and Guardian Air Service for a trip to Ontario. Young received $4,344 in state legislative and teaching pensions. The Alaska Permanent Fund is financed by oil royalties and distributed to every Alaska resident of one year or more.

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Rep. James Oberstar, D-Minn., ranking Democrat on the House Transportation and Infrastructure Committee.

Major sources of unearned income: Dividends and interest, $2,400-$7,200.

Major liabilities: None.

Gifts: None.

Narrative: Oberstar took five privately sponsored trips last year: two by the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, and one each by the Association of American Railroads, the American Road and Transportation Builders Association and the Bikes Belong Coalition. Oberstar's wife, Jean, who is worth several million dollars, made four-dozen stock and bond transactions.

Major sources of unearned income: Redemption of inherited IRA, $6,000.

Major liabilities: None.

Gifts: None.

Narrative: Smith and his wife, Marie, put much of their money in college funds for their four children. Though the disclosure form requires only that investments be reported in broad ranges, Smith listed precise figures for his gains and losses, including a $3,474 capital loss in an international mutual fund.

Narrative: Evans took an expenses-paid, three-day trip to Louisville, Ky., sponsored by the Vietnam Veterans of America. Evans is a director of the Center for Mind-Body Studies in Washington, D.C., and Skills Inc. in Moline, Ill.